1983 was by the far, the biggest year, that new order would ever have.
Power corruption and lies, was huge, and of course 'blue monday'.
there would never be another year like this again for the group.
new order
album - power corruption and lies
https://en.wikipedia.org...wer,_Corruption_%26_Liescar:
boxed cassette :
Power, Corruption & Lies is the second studio album by the English rock band New
Order, released in May 1983 on Factory Records. The album features more electronic-
based tracks than their previous album Movement, with heavier use of synthesizers. It
was included in the top 100 albums of the 1980s lists in both Rolling Stone and
Pitchfork Media.
Peter Saville's design for the album had a colour-based code to represent the band's
name and the title of the album, but they were not actually written on the original
UK sleeve itself (they were present on some non-UK versions), although the catalogue
number "FACT 75" does appear on the top-right corner. The decoder for the code was
featured prominently on the back cover of the album and can also be used for the
"Blue Monday" and "Confusion" singles and for Section 25's album From the Hip.
The cover is a reproduction of the painting "A Basket of Roses" by French artist
Henri Fantin-Latour, which is part of the National Gallery's permanent collection in
London. Saville had originally planned to use a Renaissance portrait of a dark prince
to tie in with the Machiavellian theme of the title, but couldn't find a suitable
portrait. At the gallery Saville picked up a postcard with Fantin-Latour's painting,
and his girlfriend mockingly asked him if he was going to use it for the cover.
Saville then realised it was a great idea. Saville suggested that the flowers
"suggested the means by which power, corruption and lies infiltrate our lives.
They're seductive." The cover was also intended to create a collision between the
overly romantic and classic image which made a stark contrast to the typography based
on the modular, colour-coded alphabet. Saville and Tony Wilson, the head of the
label, also said that the owner of the painting (The National Heritage Trust) first
refused Factory Records access to it. Wilson then called up the gallery director to
ask who actually owned the painting and was given the answer that the Trust belonged
to the people of Britain, at some point. Wilson then famously replied, "I believe the
people want it." The director then replied, "If you put it like that, Mr Wilson, I'm
sure we can make an exception in this case."
Power, Corruption & Lies was well-received on its release, and is still well-
regarded. In a contemporary review for Rolling Stone magazine, Steve Pond felt that
the band had finally separated themselves from their past Joy Division associations,
calling the album a "remarkable declaration of independence" and a "quantum leap"
over Movement. The album was placed number 23 on the The Village Voice 1983 Pazz &
Jop critics poll. In a retrospective review of the band's first five albums, Josh
Modell of The A.V. Club called Power, Corruption & Lies "the sound of a band coming
out of the shadows, retaining some of the pop elements of older days, but also
embracing happiness and a whole new world of sequencers," crediting the album's
humanity as a part of its charm. John Bush of AllMusic stated that that the album
"cemented New Order's place as the most exciting dance-rock hybrid in music.
singles
1983 03 mar "Blue Monday"
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blue_Monday_(New_Order_song)
info:
http://www.discogs.com/N...-Blue-Monday/master/3297"Blue Monday" is a single released in 1983 by British band New Order, later remixed
in 1988 and 1995. The song has been widely remixed and covered since its original
release, and became a popular anthem in the dance club scene. It is the biggest-
selling 12" single of all time.
At nearly seven-and-a-half minutes, "Blue Monday" is one of the longest tracks ever
to chart on the UK Singles Chart. Despite selling well it was not eligible for an
official gold disc because Factory Records was not a member of the British
Phonographic Industry association. According to the Official Charts Company, its
total sales stands at 1.16 million in the United Kingdom alone, and "Blue Monday"
came 69th in the all-time UK best-selling singles chart published in November 2012
The artwork is designed to resemble a 5 1/4" floppy disk. The sleeve does not display
either the group name nor song title in plain English anywhere; the only text on the
sleeve is "FAC SEVENTY THREE" on the spine. Instead the legend "FAC 73 BLUE MONDAY
AND THE BEACH NEW ORDER" is represented in code by a series of coloured blocks. The
key enabling this to be deciphered was printed on the back sleeve of the album,
Power, Corruption & Lies. "Blue Monday" and Power, Corruption & Lies are two of
four Factory releases from this time period to employ the colour code, the others
being "Confusion" by New Order and From the Hip by Section 25.
The single's original sleeve, created by Factory designer Peter Saville and Brett
Wickens, was die-cut with a silver inner sleeve.It cost so much to produce that
Factory Records actually lost money on each copy sold. Matthew Robertson's Factory
Records: The Complete Graphic Album notes that "[d]ue to the use of die-cutting and
specified colours, the production cost of this sleeve was so high that the single
sold at a loss." Tony Wilson noted that it lost 5p per sleeve "due to our strange
accounting system"; Saville noted that nobody expected "Blue Monday" to be a
commercially successful record at all, so nobody expected the cost to be an issue."
In Shadowplayers: The Rise and Fall of Factory Records, Saville states "I am so bored
with this story. We didn't even know how many of these expensive covers were ever
made anyway."
Robertson also noted that "[l]ater reissues had subtle changes to limit the cost"
(the diecut areas being replaced with printed silver ink). Saville commented in 2013
that the printers "banged out a cheaper version. I don't know how many thousands were
sold [the original] way, or whether Factory were charged the full price for something
they didn't get, which would be very Factory."
The artwork was so late that Saville sent it straight to the printer, unreviewed by
either the band or the label.
A music video for a shortened version of the original song was created in 1983,
featuring military clips with false colour, simple computer-generated graphics such
as colour blocks and geometric lines, digitised video of band members at very low
resolution and framerate, and a short appearance of the game Zaxxon (reportedly the
Apple II port). The colour blocks were created using Peter Saville's colour-coded
alphabet.
"Blue Monday" has been a hit several times in the UK. In 1983, it charted twice,
initially reaching number 12, then re-entering the chart later in the year and
climbing to number 9, helped by the fact that neither side of the single (the B-side
"The Beach" was an instrumental re-working of "Blue Monday") was featured on the UK
version of the group's subsequent album, Power, Corruption & Lies.
New Order appeared on the BBC's Top of the Pops, on 31 March 1983, to promote the
song. New Order insisted on performing Blue Monday live. The performance was dogged
by technical problems, and was unrepresentative of the recording. In the words of
drummer Stephen Morris, "Blue Monday was never the easiest song to perform, anyway,
and everything went wrong. The synthesisers went awry. It sounded awful". In 1985,
"Blue Monday" and "Thieves Like Us" were officially released in Poland as a 7" single
in different sleeve by Tonpress under license from Factory Records and sold over
50,000 copies and reached number 5 on the end-of-year single chart.
09 sep "Confusion"
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Confusion_(New_Order_song)
info:
http://www.discogs.com/N...er-Confusion/master/4330"Confusion" is a single released by British group New Order in August 1983 with the
catalogue number FAC 93. It was the follow-up to their massive club hit "Blue Monday"
and is unique for having both Peter Hook and Bernard Sumner playing bass guitars on
it. The song is produced by influential New York DJ Arthur Baker. As a result it was
recorded in New York, a rarity for the band. Three remixes served as B-sides on the
initial 12" release: "Confused Beats", "Confusion Instrumental" and "Confusion Rough Mix".
videos
new order
from : shorts
http://www.niagara.edu/neworder/video/shorts.html1983 03 mar "Blue Monday"
edit
09 sep "Confusion"
from a factory outing:
http://www.niagara.edu/neworder/video/afo.htmlyour silent face:
1983 by group:
1983 by month:
later
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Edited by user 18 December 2015 20:08:03(UTC)
| Reason: Not specified